Lacock
June 26th 1836
Dear Sir
I think Reid <1> had better meet me in London on Saturday or Monday, at No 31 Sackville Street <2> –
During my Devonshire tour I saw several interesting plants, the purple & white Melittis in the hedges, the Sibthorpić Europćć &c. There is a plant exceedingly common there which looks like Thlaspi campestre but is perennial – I think it must be Lepidium Smithii – Vicia bithynica I found in abundance at Exmouth.
Silene maritima is very plentiful & I think certainly a different species from S. inflata – Hottonia palustris is very common near Taunton in Somersetshire. I mentioned to you last year that I had raised one of the Texas plants from seeds picked out of the specimen <3> – It seeded freely again & I have now abundance of it – It is an Arenaria related to A. marina of our English seacoasts. I procured the latter last autumn from the Isle of Wight in order to cultivate the 2 plants together in my greenhouse, and I found several points of difference between them, viz.
Arenaria marina | the Texas plant |
perennial? | annual |
flowers open in all weather (closing only in the evening) | flowers only open in very light sunshine |
Stamina 10 | stamina generally 2 or 3 rarely 5 |
|
|
I conceive these 2 plants to form a genus very distinct from Arenaria which may be named Spergulopsis – Can you refer to [illegible deletion] this plant in your Texas herbarium, & see whether you have given it any name?
I have now succeeded in raising a second Texas plant of which I have six or eight specimens in flower at the present moment. It is apparently a species of Sisymbrium the leaves are elegantly cut, petals small, greenishyellow [sic], pedicel of the fruit refracted, silique rather short for the genus – If you like to cultivate these 2 plants I will save you some seed of them.
I have great tufts in my garden of the enclosed pink, do you think it is the D. arenarius of Willdenow? <4> It is a very desirable species for the garden –
Believe me Yours very truly
H. F. Talbot
London June twenty seven 1836 W. F. Strangways
Sir W. Hooker
Glasgow
Notes:
1. John Reid, head gardener at Lacock Abbey.
2. 31 Sackville Street, London residence of the Feildings, often used as a London base by WHFT.
3. See Doc. No: 02909.
4. Karl Ludwig Willdenow (1765–1812), botanist.
5. See Doc. No: 03280.
6. William Thomas Horner Fox Strangways, 4th Earl of Ilchester (1795–1865), botanist, art collector & diplomat.